Master in Professional Accounting Admissions Blog

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The Accountant of the Future

Data analytics and artificial intelligence are redefining the profession and McCombs is keeping page. Story by Judie Kinonen.

Nichole Jordan

Nichole Jordan, BBA ’95, says new technologies are rapidly transforming the accounting profession.

The stereotype of the solitary accountant walled up in a cubicle and poring over spreadsheets for eight hours a day was always a little dubious. But industry expert Nichole Jordan, BBA ’95, says new technologies that are rapidly transforming the accounting profession have shattered the image of the bean-counting accountant on a mundane career path.

A CPA and member of the McCombs Accounting Advisory Council, Jordan is also national managing partner of growth and performance at Grant Thornton. “I see new staff coming to the firm with the desire and ambition to contribute at a higher level — to do the more strategic and analytical parts of the job,” she says.

Her own role with Grant Thornton sends her all over the world, meeting with business management teams and boards to listen to their concerns and introduce them to new technologies and digital strategies.

Michael Clement Data Analytics

Department Chair Michael Clement remembers noting that UT Austin’s accounting program ranked No. 1 when he was in college in 1980.

Deciding how to properly address these trends in the classroom at McCombs is top priority, says Department Chair Michael Clement.

“My main concern right now is to make sure our students can thrive in the world of big data,” he says, noting shifts in the curriculum are starting in the Master’s in Professional Accounting program, with reverberations in the undergraduate and doctoral programs likely in the near future.

All three programs have topped the national rankings for so long that it is hardly news anymore. Clement vividly recalls a day in 1980, his senior year at Baruch College in New York City, when he  walked past a bulletin board listing the top accounting programs in the country. “UT Austin was No. 1, and then I noticed that half of my textbooks were written by UT faculty,” he recalls.

Again this year, the undergraduate, master’s, and doctoral programs at McCombs ranked No. 1 in U.S. News & World Report. The undergraduate program has held the first- or second-place spots on that list for a straight 28 years, the master’s degree for 26, and the doctoral program for an 11th year.

But Clement attests that there’s a revolution afoot, leaving the department no time to rest on its laurels. “There’s a lot going on in the industry, and we want to give our students the tools so that when things change, they can adapt to those changes,” he says.

To that end, the MPA Program recently adopted a proposal requiring every course within the next two years include content on data analytics, says MPA Program Senior Director Stephen Smith.


THE WEIGHT OF DATA

What’s new in accounting is not the idea of analyzing data — the difference is in the type of data itself. Typically, accountants are trained to handle and analyze structured data that can be easily organized and searched.

But in this era of big data, accountants must also manipulate unstructured data that appears in myriad formats and without pre-defined models. Unstructured data is more challenging to organize and search.

Steve Smith Data Analytics

MPA Senior Director Stephen Smith stays in close contact with industry partners in order to better understand how big data disruptions are transforming the profession.

Big data is causing disruption in many industries, but deciding what it means for accountants is a bit of a moving target, says Smith, who is in close communication with industry partners about how they are coping with these new forms of information.

They tell him that the skill of data cleansing is among an accountant’s greatest assets today. In the past, an auditor calculating interest expense on loans at a bank would simply sample — taking, for example, 100 out of the possible 1,000 loans and manually calculating the interest. “If you didn’t find any problems for those hundred loans, then you assume the whole interest expense line on your income statement is okay,” department chair Clement says.

But today, there’s no need to sample, he says. “Now I can do that calculation for all thousand loans and know for sure that the interest calculation is correct.”

Beyond that, today’s auditor may be asked to produce a report that includes information from several different sources. It could be customer information in one file, loan descriptions in another, Clement says.

“In order to combine all those different sources into a single, usable source, you have to have solid data manipulation and data cleansing skills.”

The ability to test every transaction has other repercussions too, says Jeff Johanns, senior lecturer at McCombs and a former partner and assurance risk management leader at PricewaterhouseCoopers.

“If you’re testing 100 percent of transactions rather than sampling, instead of five exceptions, you may have dozens of exceptions,” he says. “Now what? What does that mean to you as an auditor? These are the things that we have to train accountants to deal with. Just because the software produces this beautiful graph is meaningless if the accountant doesn’t know what to do with it.”


“TELLING A STORY” WITH DATA

“So more and more an accountant’s job is answering the question, ‘What is the data telling us?’” says Smith.

That’s the important question, says Jordan. “Technology is crunching the numbers to a greater extent and making it possible for us to be more strategic and analytical when it comes to identifying  patterns in the data,” she says. “The job becomes more about understanding the real performance of the business.”

Patti Brown Data Analytics

Patti Brown, MPA ’89, uses a hands-on approach for teaching accounting because it instills confidence in her students.

These are skill sets already addressed in several McCombs MPA courses, including Information Technology for Accounting Control — a requirement for all MPA students — taught by Patti Brown, MPA ’89, who joined the faculty as a lecturer in 2011.

Brown says her teaching approach is twopronged: introducing the technology tools and business process methodologies, and then providing students with large volumes of real data in case studies in which they can apply the technology tools to gain insights from the data. “It’s very hands-on to help students gain confidence in working with various technologies,” she says.

Students in her class learn SAP, Tableau, Microsoft Access, and Power BI, but hers is not a static curriculum. “Given that the technology and emerging technologies are rapidly changing, I constantly have to look at what I’m offering in the course,” says Brown. “I stay connected to partners in public accounting and large companies that are hiring our students to understand what technology they’re using and how to best prepare our students.”

MPA students work with real industry data from the SAP University Alliance, which is not available in many other accounting master’s programs — and in Brown’s class they begin with data from a national coffee shop chain. Using Tableau, students go beyond number crunching and learn to “tell a story,” Brown says.

“Often, in academia, students are focused on getting the ‘right answer,’” she says. But in this coffee shop case, she asks them to identify three areas that the company should focus on for profit maximization. “So, I’m not looking for one specific right answer,” she says.

Instead, students are challenged to use their critical thinking skills, Brown says. “Why did the coffee shop spend this much in marketing in the Northeast? Why did green tea in the South not do as well as the Northeast? I want them to tell the story and point out the different insights that they’ve gained through their analysis.”

Kristina Zvinakis Data Analytics

Senior Lecturer and Assistant Department Chair Kristina Zvinakis said that critical thinking skills are a hallmark of McCombs’ MPA program.

It’s not exactly the type of task accountants are traditionally known for, but it’s not a huge stretch either, says Kristina Zvinakis, senior lecturer and assistant department chair. Critical thinking skills have always been a hallmark of McCombs’ MPA program and one reason it is consistently ranked No. 1 in the nation, she says.


SOFT SKILLS STILL APPLY

The disruption in accounting mirrors what has happened in other fields, Jordan says, and it’s no cause for alarm for those willing to adapt. “Technology will change, but not replace, the accountant’s job,” she says. “An accountant paired with artificial intelligence or machine learning-enabled technology is a winning combination.”

In fact, for new accountants, proficiency in technology and critical thinking is not more important than the skills Jordan says she most remembers learning from her time at UT: teamwork and  communication.

“The ability to build relationships will definitely become more important than it is today,” Jordan says. “I think that because of artificial intelligence, the mundane and the more basic types of work will become more automated in our profession. This means we can focus on other important things.”

With new technologies doing more of the tedious work, the accountant of the future will have more freedom and flexibility. Says Jordan: “Your ability to go down the hallway and talk to the CFO and engage in a great C-suite conversation, ask the right questions, and seek to understand and be curious will be very, very important skills.”

Read more about the latest news and happenings at the McCombs School of Business in McCombs Magazine.

 

Texas McCombs MPA Ranked No. 1 for 11th Straight Year

Texas McCombs has once again taken first place in Public Accounting Report’s (PAR) undergraduate, master’s, and doctoral rankings. PAR ranks U.S. academic accounting institutions every year by surveying nearly 1,000 accounting faculty members across U.S. colleges and universities.

Medium_Rankings No.1_PAR_2019

Master’s Ranking: No. 1
Texas McCombs has led the nation at the master’s level (Master in Professional Accounting) in 25 out of the past 26 surveys. This is also the 11th straight year the MPA program has clinched the top spot. BYU jumped ahead of Illinois to take second place this year, leaving Illinois in third.

Explore the undergraduate, graduate, and PhD rankings, as well as further accolades, on the Texas McCombs News blog.

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One reason the Department of Accounting and its programs continue to rank so high is due to our faculty (along with their research and curriculum). Read on to learn more about recent research and curriculum from our Department’s faculty.

Move Donors to the Head of the Transplant Line?
Accounting research demonstrates how a simple rule change could boost the number of usable organ donations — and save lives. Based on the research of Ronghuo Zheng.

zhengAwaiting an organ transplant for yourself or a loved one means delays that can be agonizing — and costly. Every day, 20 patients on U.S. waiting lists die before an organ becomes available, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

In a sense, it’s a classic accounting problem of supply and demand, says Ronghuo Zheng, assistant professor of accounting at Texas McCombs. While 113,759 U.S. patients languished on lists last year, only 17,554 donors, living and deceased, provided organs.

How can the U.S. expand its supply? In new research, Zheng finds that with one important modification to a Nobel laureate’s proposed rule, it could swell the pool of donors while ensuring that patients get usable organs.

The proposal, known as the donor priority rule, would hold out a carrot to potential registered donors. If one of them gets sick themselves and needs a transplant, they’ll be able to cut in line, taking priority over those who aren’t registered.

>> Continue reading on Big Ideas

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Patrick Badolato, Senior Lecturer at Texas McCombs, recently posted an article on LinkedIn regarding his Financial Statement Analysis class and how it correlates to real world companies. 

An Update on Uber, Financial Accounting, Financial Statement Analysis and Cash Flow Bros
In addition to the Uber commentary at the end, I offer this post as a quick update for any interested former students or colleagues (I hope you are doing well!) and as some quick thoughts for anyone who just started or may take any of these classes at the University of Texas’s McCombs School of Business.

BadolatoThis Fall our Department asked me to teach the four classes of the (introductory) Financial Accounting class to our Full-time MBAs in addition to six sections of Financial Statement Analysis (across 5 of our graduate programs). While this uniquely high course load will be an incredible challenge, I am absolutely excited to have this opportunity, which began this past week.

As my former students and colleagues know, the course I have focused on and developed over the past many years is not introductory accounting, but Financial Statement Analysis (FSA). I have had the pleasure of teaching this upper-level class in all of the McCombs graduate programs that include accounting classes. In this class we have covered Starbucks, JCPenney, Nordstrom, Apple, Ford, Tesla, Amazon, Netflix, Walmart, Whole Foods, Facebook, Priceline, Southwest, Coca-Cola, Disney, ToysRUs, Theranos, Groupon, Square, Blue Apron, GoPro, Yeti, Exxon, Beyond Meat, Lyft, etc. After taking FSA, students note that they appreciate how the class helps them: (1) see how and why valuation and analysis are more than mindless mechanical processes; (2) understand the importance of stepping back and understanding the business; and (3) offers the opportunity to see that there is a ton of information in financial reports, once we gain comfort working past the fluff and filler and focus on holistically using the financial statements and other information.

Learn more about the FSA class by reading Patrick Badolato’s full article

Latest Accounting Research: More Corporate Cash Flows into the U.S. than Out

Based on the research of Texas McCombs Accounting Professor Lillian Mills: Despite popular belief, all U.S. firms haven’t been sending most of their earnings abroad to dodge taxes, finds a study using IRS data.

BigIdeas1In recent years, one of the major exports of U.S. businesses has been cash. Several reports, such as one by Bloomberg News, have tallied more than $2 trillion of earnings stashed in foreign subsidiaries in countries with lower corporate tax rates.

So it might come as a surprise that over a decade, American businesses brought more money into the country than they shipped out. That’s one conclusion from new research by Lillian Mills, accounting professor at Texas McCombs, and two recent McCombs doctoral accounting graduates, Lisa De Simone and Bridget Stomberg.

Analyzing corporate returns filed with the Internal Revenue Service, the researchers found that U.S. multinationals imported $1 trillion from offshore affiliates, while they exported $830 million. Close to two-thirds of all returns showed more money coming in than going out.

Those businesses tended to be older and larger ones, which built U.S. factories and headquarters decades ago.

Read the full article in Big Ideas: Research and insights from Texas McCombs here.

Welcome Traditional MPA Class of 2020!

It’s official! The Master in Professional Accounting program has our traditional MPA Class of 2020!

We have students joining us from four different countries (China, Republic of Korea, Taiwan, and the United States), as well as from 15 different states.

From biology and Spanish to mathematics and accounting, the MPA Class of 2020 has a wide range of skills and undergraduate majors. Some have earned MBAs and some have Master of Science degrees, but all of these admitted students will come together to study at the top-ranked graduate accounting program in the nation.

Let’s take a closer look at our Class of 2020 with our incoming students’ profile:

We are looking forward to seeing all of our students together for the first time at the tMPA Fall Orientation starting August 20! Some students will have the chance to meet each other beforehand in summer classes and career workshops.

Welcome to Texas McCombs, Class of 2020! Hook ’em!

Congratulations to the MPA Class of 2019!

What a journey! It’s been a year full of learning, making new friends, studying for exams, drinking coffee, consuming as many tacos as possible, and so much more. The Master in Professional Accounting Program Office and the Department of Accounting were thrilled to celebrate the MPA Class of 2019 at Commencement on Saturday, May 25.

Family, friends, faculty, and staff came together on Saturday to congratulate over 300 students (including integrated, traditional, and ECON MPAs) graduating from the Master in Professional Accounting program.

Before walking across that stage, an MPA Commencement Reception was held in the Graduate School Building Atrium. The food was plentiful and the photo booth was lively as graduating students and their families mingled with faculty and staff from the McCombs School of Business. It was a great way to kick off an exciting day ahead.

Students then headed across Speedway to Gregory Gymnasium to get ready to receive their diplomas! Over 200 MPA students and faculty members were a part of the ceremony, including MPA Senior Director Steve Smith, Department Chair Michael Clement, and Dean Jay Hartzell. They all mentioned in their speeches how this class continued to exceed expectations and how bright these students’ futures are.

 Dean Jay Hartzell along with faculty and students making their way to Gregory Gymnasium for the 2019 MPA Commencement.

Dean Jay Hartzell along with faculty and students making their way to Gregory Gymnasium for the 2019 MPA Commencement.

 

Our keynote speaker was Brien Smith, the Managing Director of Neuberger Berman and the COO of the Neuberger Berman Private Equity Division. Mr. Smith received a Master in Professional Accounting and a Bachelor of Business Administration from the University of Texas at Austin.

Brien Smith of Neuberger Berman and MPA alum was our keynote speaker.

Brien Smith of Neuberger Berman and MPA alum was our keynote speaker.

 

We also had graduating MPAs share their experiences in the program. James Olsen is an iMPA who was born and raised in Houston, Texas and is a first generation college student. Alec Weismann is also an iMPA student and grew up in Minnesota. They both are outstanding people and future leaders, and we loved their speeches on how this Class of 2019 “truly will change the world.”

iMPA student James Olson closing out his speech.

iMPA student James Olson closing out his speech.

 

Additionally, student awards were given out during Commencement. Adam Landefeld won the Outstanding 4th Year MPA Award. Adam’s outstanding academic performance has earned him several scholarships including the competitive Endowed Presidential Scholarship.  According to one of his instructors, Adam “is a natural leader and was prepared for class with interesting questions.  He was a delight to teach!”

 Adam Landefeld and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

Adam Landefeld and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

 

Alec Weissman won the Outstanding 5th Year MPA Award. Alec also worked as a TA for accounting professor Jeff Johanns who explained that Alec “demonstrated dedication way above a typical TA” by, among other things, volunteering to mentor a struggling student.  Academically, Alec is among this highest performing MPAs with a graduate GPA of 4.0.

Alec Weissman and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

Alec Weissman and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

 

Derek John received the MPA Outstanding Student Leadership Award for his meritorious service and support of the Master in Professional Accounting program and community. Derek was a Peer Career Consultant (PCC) and continually went above and beyond to ensure MPA students were getting all they could out of their time at Texas McCombs… From recording webinars to conducting mock interviews to reviewing resumes, Derek added something special to the program, and we are so thankful to have had him as a student and PCC!

Derek John and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

Derek John and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

Emily O’Keefe received the Outstanding tMPA Award for her exceptional contributions to student life and class unity through demonstrations of personal character, class spirit, and campus leadership. She was also the person to close out the MPA Commencement Ceremony by singing “The Eyes of Texas.” Congratulations, Emily!

Emily O'Keefe and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

Emily O’Keefe and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

 

Even though the Ceremony lasted almost two hours, it seemed to be over in the blink of an eye. MPAs hugged and took pictures together, then said their goodbyes. It’s always bittersweet to see our students move on to the next chapter in their lives, but we know they truly will change the world and will always be Longhorns. We are so proud of the graduating MPA Class of 2019 and cannot wait to see what they accomplish. Hook ‘em!

 Congratulations to the MPA Class of 2019!

Congratulations to the MPA Class of 2019!

 

Accounting Professor Dr. Michael Granof Retires

1972. The year the Dow closed above 1000 for the first time in history. The year The Godfather hit theaters… and the year Dr. Michael Granof started working at the University of Texas at Austin. As we dive into his 47 years (yes, 47 years!) of being a Longhorn, let’s take a walk down memory lane and celebrate his legacy at UT.

Michael Granof was born and raised in New York City and graduated from the Bronx High School of Science. He then studied economics at Hamilton College in Clinton, New York. Two years after receiving his BA, he graduated from Columbia University with an MBA concentrating in accounting.

Dr. Michael Granof as an infant

Michael was born and raised in New York City.

After graduating from Columbia in 1965, Michael enlisted in the United States Coast Guard. He served one year of active duty and a total of six years in the reserves as an electrician’s mate. During two of the six years he was in the reserves, he worked as a Senior Accountant at Coopers and Lybrand in New York City. It was in the Big Apple that Michael discovered that his thirst for knowledge hadn’t been quenched. He decided to return to school to earn his doctorate in accounting from the University of Michigan. “I thought that I would enjoy teaching and the academic life,” Michael said. “Returning to graduate school was most definitely a decision that I never for an instant regretted.”

The move to Ann Arbor would change his life forever on a personal dimension, as well. It was on Michigan’s campus that he met his wife, Dena, at a graduate school coffee hour. The two have now been married 47 years.

Michael and Dena Granof

Michael and his wife, Dena, have been married 47 years.

After four years of graduate study at Michigan, Michael earned his PhD in 1972. He chose to teach at the University of Texas at Austin for three reasons: UT’s Department of Accounting was a top-ranked program, their faculty were involved in what he thought was an ideal mix of teaching, research, and professional engagement, and – most notably he claims – it was a great institution from which he could leave to teach at any other university after a few years. So he and Dena made the move to the Forty Acres. Much to their surprise, they loved UT and Austin and never left.

In addition to being on the faculty at the McCombs School of Business, Michael holds a joint appointment at the LBJ School of Public Affairs. Over the course of his career, he was a Fulbright Professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and taught at universities in New Zealand and Finland. He has also been recognized for his outstanding teaching, and in 1997 was inducted into the University’s Academy of Distinguished Teachers. In 2017 he received the AICPA’s Distinguished Achievement in Accounting Education Award.

Michael Granof teaching

Dr. Michael Granof teaching at the McCombs School of Business.

Michael is currently completing the second of two five-year terms on both the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) and the Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board (FASAB). The former establishes accounting standards for state and local governments; the latter for the federal government at-large and each of its components. He is the only academic to have served on both boards. “My most satisfying professional accomplishment (other than teaching) has been my service on the FASAB and the GASB. I believe that I have actually had an influence on a couple of the pronouncements that they have issued,” Michael said.

Also active in academic organizations, Michael has been chairman of the Government and Not-for-Profit Section of the American Accounting Association, was on the editorial boards of government-oriented journals, and was a member of the U.S. Comptroller’s General Educator Advisory Council for over 15 years.

Michael’s service has not only been to external organizations. He was heavily involved in University affairs as chairman of the Faculty Council and chairman of the UT Co-op’s Board of Directors. In 2007 he received the UT Civitatis Award, given for “meritorious service to the University above and beyond the regular expectations of teaching, research, and writing.” As fellow professor and friend Steve Kachelmeier said, “To this day, if the entire faculty of the Department of Accounting were to walk over to the central administrative offices at the Main Tower, Michael Granof would be among the first to be recognized. He epitomizes the spirit of academic service that elevates collective contributions over individual incentives.”

In addition to his service and academic publications, Michael is the author of textbooks on both financial and governmental accounting and has written op-ed pieces for the New York Times and other newspapers. He has testified before the Texas State House and Senate Committees and has appeared on NPR, CNBC, and MSNBC.

After retiring, Michael has a few things he’d like to accomplish, including traveling, spending more time with his grandchildren (he has three!), and giving back to the community by serving on a nonprofit board. But even in retirement, he’ll still be back on campus to visit his Longhorn family. Michael added, “I’ve often joked that the epitaph on my tombstone should read ‘He hung around with smart people.’ Nothing epitomizes that more than my colleagues, friends, and students in McCombs, the LBJ School, and the University at-large.”

The Takeaway: Will Braeutigam, Deloitte

Meet MPA alum Will Braeutigam, a Deloitte Audit Partner and tMPA ‘05. From the MPA program to the Big 4, Will has been putting his knowledge of accounting to good use. Let’s learn more about his journey from the GSB building to professional success.

WHAT DID YOU STUDY WHILE AT UT?
I actually started my studies in computer science and soon decided that was not the career path for me. I then transferred into the College of Liberal Arts and majored in Economics. After completing that degree, I continued my studies and obtained a Master in Professional Accounting degree from Texas McCombs.

WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE MEMORY FROM OF ATTENDING THE UNIVERSITY?
There isn’t just one. The University of Texas has incredible students, professors, and facilities. And, of course, Austin is fantastic! I think my favorite memory is just being on campus, whether that was studying, attending class, grabbing food at the Union, or attending a football or basketball game.

TELL US ABOUT YOUR CURRENT ROLE AT DELOITTE.
I am an Oil and Gas Audit Partner and Deloitte’s Oil and Gas IPO Readiness and Execution leader. My role involves daily interaction with clients while providing auditing, advising, and consulting services. I also serve as the lead recruiting partner at the University of Texas for the Houston Audit practice. When UT students join the firm, I help guide them along their path and watch them become fantastic professionals (whether at Deloitte or in another industry).

HOW DID THE MPA PROGRAM PREPARE YOU FOR PROFESSIONAL SUCCESS?
The high quality of the program’s curriculum, faculty, and graduate students are why so many companies focus their recruiting efforts here. First, the program’s core accounting curriculum and teachers are unrivaled by other universities (I might be a little biased as an alum). Second, group projects helped prepare me to work on large teams with common goals. And third, the technology and finance classes helped me immediately execute work and innovate on the job. Also, while I was a student, I took the opportunity to be a teaching assistant and this helped me become a better teacher and mentor within Deloitte’s apprenticeship model.

WHAT DO YOU MISS MOST ABOUT AUSTIN?
Well, Austin is home to the University of Texas so that’s hard not to miss! I miss all the activities and events that go on in Austin. The city has outstanding food, an incredible night life, fantastic weather, and world-class concerts and festivals.

One More Reason to Love Tax Season

2019 will go down in history as the year Foundation Communities reached the milestone of filing 250,000 tax returns for Central Texans. Students and faculty at the University of Texas at Austin have helped the nonprofit hit that mark.

For many people, a tax refund is more than a benefit that results from owing less tax than they anticipated. That refund might provide funds for a coworker’s next rent payment, a friend’s utility bill, or put food on a neighbor’s table. Without assistance, many people in the Austin community would have difficulty accessing these funds.

Each spring semester, the Department of Accounting partners with Foundation Communities, a local nonprofit that provides affordable housing and a variety of free on-site services, to train and certify UT students to prepare personal tax returns for filers who earn less than $55,000 annually.

Ross Jennings and Steve Limberg created the Tax Practicum class in 2006. Ross, the Department Chair at the time, was exploring new ways to increase students’ opportunities for experiential learning. It came to his attention that several accounting students were volunteering at Foundation Communities to prepare returns, and an idea struck him. Why not offer a class to train students to file tax returns AND give back to their community?

“I asked Steve Limberg to design and teach the class, and he did a fabulous job. Steve taught the course for one year, and then turned it over to Brian Lendecky. During Brian’s first few years, the class grew to what it is today,” Ross said.

This semester, J Kamas and Gretchen Charrier are teaching the Practicum. In addition to completing return preparation training and preparing returns, the students also attend a series of classes that feature IRS guest speakers. For many participants, the class provides an inspiring and rewarding experience that comes from supporting the people of Austin. “Our students are really focused on giving back to the community,” J added.

This year, 208 UT students are enrolled in the class. 59 of those students are MPAs; economics, finance, and accounting undergraduates comprise the rest of the student population enrolled in the course. Fifth-year iMPA student Erin Markey said, “This work can really impact lives, and many clients share their excitement about what the money will do for their families.”

Before they begin volunteering, students are trained and certified by the IRS. Then, until April 15, they volunteer for 55 to 60 hours in order to meet their course requirements. In Austin, there are six locations at which clients can meet with a volunteer and have their return filed for free. Many clients especially benefit from the knowledge their student volunteers have of child tax credits and of the earned income credit. Often, Foundation Communities tax filers are unaware of these tax benefits and might otherwise have to rely on a tax professional to receive them.

“Foundation Communities simply could not serve as many clients and prepare as many tax returns without the student volunteers. In total, we’ve had over 2,000 students work in our program and help their Austin neighbors file their taxes correctly, saving folks over $7 million in tax preparation fees,” said Walter Moreau, Executive Director of Foundation Communities.

Since its inception 13 years ago, over 250,000 returns have been filed, resulting in over $382 million in refunds for those community members. We estimate that approximately one-third of all returns completed at the Foundation Communities sites were prepared by UT-Austin students. Brian Lendecky added, “The city gives so much to UT; it’s nice that UT can give back to the city.”

Tax Practicum Volunteer

Texas McCombs MPA student Parker Rasansky checks in clients at the Foundation Communities front desk.

AICPA Announces 2018 Elijah Watt Sells Award Winners

The American Institute of CPAs (AICPA) named the 110 recipients of the 2018 Elijah Watt Sells Award on Thursday, April 11, and the Texas McCombs MPA program has three winners:

  • Natalie Gilbert (BBA ’17, MPA ’18) who is currently employed with PwC in Houston, Texas
  • Laura “Elise” Jones (BBA ’17, MPA ’18) who is currently employed with KPMG in Dallas, Texas
  • Minjae Kim (BHP and BBA ’17, MPA ’18) who is currently employed with Analysis Group in Dallas, Texas

This award recognizes those who scored a cumulative average score above 95.50 across all four sections of the CPA exam, passed all four sections of the exam on their first attempt, and completed their testing in 2018. Over 86,000 individuals sat for the CPA exam in 2018.

78% of Texas McCombs students who took the CPA exam in 2018 passed all four sections; this compares to a 52% pass rate among all over Texas colleges and universities.

Congratulations to Natalie, Elise, and Minjae, as well as the other 107 winners — it’s an tremendous accomplishment to receive this award!

See a list of all the winners here.

The Elijah Watt Sells Award was established in 1923 to honor one of the country’s first CPAs, Elijah Watt Sells. He was a founding partner of Haskins & Sells (a predecessor to Deloitte) and one of the first practicing CPAs in New York. He also served on the AICPA governing council and helped turn the AICPA into what it is today.

Elijah Watt Sells Award

Meet Brian White, Associate Professor at Texas McCombs

Brian White is a member of our Department of Accounting faculty and was recently promoted to Associate Professor, effective September 1, 2018. He teaches some of the accounting MBA courses here at Texas McCombs, so you may see him in some of your electives in the near future!

WHERE DO YOU CALL HOME?
Ann Arbor, Michigan is where I was born and lived for most of my childhood. However, my wife’s hometown of Liverpool, England is my adopted hometown. I lived in Liverpool for ten years, our three kids were born there, and we go back at least two or three times every year.

WHERE DID YOU ATTEND SCHOOL?
I received a BS in Foreign Service from Georgetown (I originally planned to pursue a career as a diplomat), an MS in African Studies from University of Edinburgh, an MBA from Manchester Business School, and a PhD in Accountancy from University of Illinois

WHY DID YOU CHOOSE TO STUDY ACCOUNTING?
Necessity is the mother of invention. My wife and I bought her family business—a small chain of retail stores based in Liverpool—from her grandparents when we were both 24 years old. She had grown up in the business and I had worked as a retail manager in high school and college, but neither of us had any experience running a business. We divided up the duties, and accounting was one of mine. I quickly decided that I needed some more training, so I applied to the evening MBA program at Manchester Business School. While I was there, I focused on accounting and finance because it was so relevant to what I was doing every day at work: tracking and reporting revenues and expenses, designing compensation plans for our employees, managing the annual audit (which was required for nearly all UK companies back then), etc. I also found I was pretty good at accounting, and it was interesting. Ultimately, I ended up becoming a CPA. When I decided to pursue an academic career, a PhD in accounting was the natural choice.

WHY DID YOU CHOOSE TO WORK AT UT?
The combination of our incredible students, world-class faculty, and the city of Austin made it a very easy choice.

WHAT CLASSES DO YOU CURRENTLY TEACH?
I teach the core financial accounting class to all of our incoming full-time MBA students. I also teach the same course in our Houston MBA program. Next fall, I’m looking forward to teaching the PhD seminar on behavioral research in accounting for the first time.

FAVORITE PUBLICATION THAT YOU’VE WRITTEN?
That’s like asking me to choose between my children! If I have to choose, I will go with a paper that I published with Shana Clor-Proell (from TCU) and my Texas McCombs colleague Lisa Koonce. The paper is titled, “How do experienced users evaluate hybrid financial instruments?” It was published in the Journal of Accounting Research in 2016. Hybrids—financial instruments that have characteristics of both debt and equity—are a tricky issue in accounting because it is difficult to know how to classify them on the balance sheet. In the paper, we find that experienced finance professionals rely primarily on disclosed features of hybrid financial instruments, rather than their classification, suggesting that accounting standard setters may want to focus on disclosure. It’s been a fun paper in part because we have had the opportunity to discuss it with board members at the FASB and IASB.

ON THE OTHER HAND… FAVORITE PUBLICATION THAT YOU’VE READ?
That’s a tough one too! I’m going to go with Jeffrey Hales’ 2007 paper, “Directional preferences, information processing, and investors’ forecasts of earnings,” published in the Journal of Accounting Research. That was the paper that convinced me I wanted to do behavioral research in financial accounting. Jeff shows that simply holding stock in a company can change investors’ beliefs about the company’s future performance via a cognitive process known as motivated reasoning.

WHAT IS SOMETHING THAT MANY PEOPLE DO NOT KNOW ABOUT YOU?
I played the bass guitar in a number of different bands in high school and college. Maybe even more unbelievable is that at the same time I had long, curly hair!

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